Gods Behaving Badly

by Marie Phillips

Random House of Canada | October 28, 2008 | Trade Paperback

Based on 87 ratings | Rate this
From Marie Phillips, hailed by the Guardian Unlimited website as a "hot author" destined to "break through" in 2007, comes a highly entertaining novel set in North London, where the Greek gods have been living in obscurity since the seventeenth century.

Being immortal isn't all it's cracked up to be. Life's hard for a Greek god in the twenty-first century: nobody believes in you any more, even your own family doesn't respect you, and you're stuck in a dilapidated hovel in North London with too many siblings and not enough hot water. But for Artemis (goddess of hunting, professional dog walker), Aphrodite (goddess of beauty, telephone sex operator) and Apollo (god of the sun, TV psychic) there's no way out… until a meek cleaner and her would-be boyfriend come into their lives and turn the world upside down.

Gods Behaving Badly is that rare thing, a charming, funny, utterly original novel that satisfies the head and the heart.


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Found in: Fiction and Literature
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    Cute but over-rated
    by Randall Willis
    2 years ago

    A bit of fluff to cheer my day between world suffering and pandemics. Gods Behaving Badly answers the question: Whatever happened to those old Greek gods once everyone stopped believing in them? An amusing look at the ultimate dysfunctional family struggling to get along in modern-day London...it doesn't take much to draw parallels between the mythic characters in the book and people in our own lives (sadly). If you don't know Greek mythology, don't worry about it. Just think Kardashians or Osbournes but with incredible supernatural power. But you'll get a little more out of the book if you're familiar with the mythological context. Homer himself (the writer, not the cartoon character) couldn't have come up with this on his best day."

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